|
Oct
16
|
You are currently browsing comments. If you would like to return to the full story, you can read the full entry here: “The power, and politics, of Twitter”.
One Ping to “The power, and politics, of Twitter”
2 Responses to “The power, and politics, of Twitter”
-
1. CiarĂ¡n Says:
October 17th, 2009 at 10:32 amNice round-up.
I agree with you on pretty much all of your points, however the one thing that has struck me is that most people have pinned the blame on Carter-Ruck for the Trafigura disgrace – that’s a bit like shouting at a dog for licking its balls; this sort of thing is just what the shits at Carter-Fuck do.
The person whose name should be written on the sides of the Palace Of Westminster, along with the word SHAME, is that of the judge that granted the injunction. He is the one who really cocked his nose at hundreds of years of democracy in this country.
-
2. Rachael Says:
October 17th, 2009 at 11:40 amSuch a well written blog. I think you’ve covered everything that’s gone on the last few weeks and summed it up perfectly.
I think it’s really important that twitter as a collective group are able to show that people power really does exist.
Rachael
(@rachaelblogs)
October 19th, 2009 at 4:06 pm
Twitter, News and Mob Journalism…
The Trafigura story from last week has grown and grown, if only because of the follow-up, which I was too busy to blog about, in which Jan Moir’s piece in the Daily Mail was savaged across Twitter to remarkable effect…….